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English: A 1925 film with English subtitles, probably from an 8mm edited c. 1950s-1970s. Date: 1950s ... 1080p version with Russian intertitles and English subtitles;
English-language film Italian-language film Common source material (if any) 13 Men and a Gun (1938) Tredici uomini e un cannone (1936) Black 13 (1953) Gioventù perduta (1948) Crackers (1984) I Soliti Ignoti (1958) Everybody's Fine (2009) Stanno Tutti Bene (1990) Heartbeat (1946) Heartbeat (1939) I'll Give a Million (1938) Darò un milione (1935)
The London Russian Film Festival is an annual film festival, launched by Academia Rossica in 2007. [1] The festival is aimed to present cinema in Russian language to an English speaking audience. All films are shown in original language, with English subtitles. The film programme includes feature films as well documentaries and animated films.
The "international version" of the film was largely re-edited from the Russian version. In the prologue and epilogue, the Russian voice-over has been dubbed in English, but the characters' dialogue was kept in Russian, with stylized subtitles appearing in odd places around the screen, often animated to emphasise or complement the action. For ...
Sadko (Russian: Садко) is a 1953 Soviet adventure fantasy film directed by Aleksandr Ptushko and adapted by Konstantin Isayev, from Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov's eponymous opera, which was based on a Russian bylina (былина 'epic tale') with the same name. The music is Rimsky-Korsakov's score.
Pages in category "English-language Russian films" The following 37 pages are in this category, out of 37 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. 0–9.
Office Romance (Russian: Служебный роман, romanized: Sluzhebny roman) is a 1977 Soviet comedy film directed by Eldar Ryazanov.The film's plot is based on the stageplay Co-workers (Сослуживцы) written by Ryazanov and Emil Braginsky, and tells the story of Ludmila Kalugina, head of a statistical bureau, and her subordinate, economist Anatoly Novoseltsev, who come from ...
Mirror (Russian: Зеркало, romanized: Zerkalo) [a] is a 1975 Soviet avant-garde drama film [3] directed by Andrei Tarkovsky and written by Tarkovsky and Aleksandr Misharin. The film features Margarita Terekhova, Ignat Daniltsev, Alla Demidova, Anatoly Solonitsyn, Tarkovsky's wife Larisa Tarkovskaya, and his mother Maria Vishnyakova.